No-Till Serves As ‘Insurance’ For Highly Productive, Erosive Soils

Cover crops, no-till and a finely tuned planter without coulters helps Missouri no-tiller Byron Fink make the most of his farm’s fragile soils.

Byron Fink's Oregon, Mo., farm is blessed with “absolutely wonderful” soil — if he can just keep it on the hillsides.

“Our loess soil is a very deep, very productive soil that absorbs water like a great big sponge and readily releases it to the crop,” he says. “The problem is it’s also very prone to erosion.”

Loess is a very fine-textured soil that is an accumulation of wind-deposited silt. It tends to be very deep with a low clay content and a high cation-exchange capacity (CEC) that boosts natural fertility.

Fink’s long-term corn yield averages are about 180 bushels per acre for corn and 55 bushels per acre for soybeans. With favorable rainfall, the loess soils deliver corn yields well above 200 bushels per acre and soybeans land in the 60-bushel range.

The erosive nature of loess soils drove Fink to begin no-tilling in the early 1980s as he grew frustrated with terraces silting in on fall-tilled ground. By 1981, he was no-tilling 90% of his corn ground and has been 100% no-till for several years.

“We were early no-till adopters in this county, but now the vast majority of crops here are no-tilled,” Fink says. “No-till is a great system for just about any soil, but for us, it’s an absolute must.”

The Right Cover. That doesn’t mean erosion issues have disappeared, though. Despite leaving surface residue, erosion continues to be an issue and that compelled Fink to explore cover crops.

Videos

Addressing a gathering of the Dodge County Farmers for Healthy Soil & Healthy Water, Russell Hedrick of Hickory, N.C., shares a presentation on the impacts on water quality that can be realized by utilizing regenerative ag practices, such as growing cover crops, reducing soil disturbance, maintaining soil armor, and integrating livestock.

Finding solutions to the problems farmers face is what inspired Harry and Etta Yetter to open a small machine shop in west central Illinois in the 1930s. Today, four generations later, Yetter continues the tradition of solving agricultural problems to meet the needs of producers all over the world.

Needham Ag understands the role of technology in making better use of limited resources within a specific environment by drawing on a wealth of global experience to overcome the challenges facing today's farmers, manufacturers and dealers.